Thu, 27 Sep 2007

Rationing is a completely irrational response to
a shortage. Rationing is predicated on the assumption that it's fair
for everyone to have the same allocation of a resource.
Nations typically behave towards each other like toddlers.
Within a nation, the politicians seem to treat citizens like children,
where every child gets an equal sized piece of cake.

I'm not a child. Neither are you. None of us are (except our
children, of course). Giving each of us identicaly sized pieces of
cake ignores all sorts of issues. For example, we are carbon-based
lifeforms. Some of us are bigger than others, are comprised of more
carbon, and need more carbon to live. Or for example, some of us use
our carbon to reduce our carbon emissions. I own 225 acres of land.
It has a growing forest which is pulling carbon out of the air. I'm a
hero -- shouldn't I get a higher carbon allowance? What if I can
consume (emit) carbon dioxide (in the form of fossil fuels) to
optimize my carbon consumption (in the form of woody growth)? How
does the carbon ration account for this? Particularly in the UK where
land ownership is far more class-based than in the US.